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WNBA legend Tina Charles announced her retirement from professional basketball on Tuesday (May 5), ending a 15-year career that leaves her as the league’s all-time leading rebounder and second-highest scorer. Charles shared her decision in a heartfelt message posted to social media, reflecting on a journey that spanned from 2010, when she was drafted first overall by the Connecticut Sun, through her final season with the same team in 2025.
Charles, 37, recorded 4,262 rebounds and scored 8,396 points during her WNBA tenure, finishing just behind Diana Taurasi for career points and holding the record for most field goals made in league history. In her retirement post, Charles wrote, "I’ve experienced the highest highs and the lowest lows, and I’m thankful for all of it. Through it all, I learned how to show up. When doubt got loud and narratives were written about me, I kept showing up. That’s the New Yorker in me, where resilience is built, not talked about."
A standout at the University of Connecticut, Charles helped the Huskies to two NCAA championships before joining the WNBA. She played for several teams, including the Connecticut Sun, New York Liberty, Washington Mystics, Phoenix Mercury, Seattle Storm, and Atlanta Dream, before returning to Connecticut for her final season. Even in her last year, she averaged an impressive 16.3 points and 5.8 rebounds per game.
Charles’ career included eight All-Star selections, a WNBA MVP award in 2012, and two scoring titles. She also won three Olympic gold medals with Team USA and three FIBA World Cup championships. Despite her many accomplishments, Charles never captured a WNBA championship, a fact noted by fans and analysts but not seen as diminishing her impact on the sport.
Off the court, Charles made a lasting difference through her charity work. She founded Hopey’s Heart Foundation in 2013, donating over 500 automated external defibrillators (AEDs) to schools and public places across the United States. Her commitment to community health was inspired by personal loss and stories like that of Wes Leonard, a high school player who died from sudden cardiac arrest. Charles received the league’s Dawn Staley Community Leadership Award twice for these efforts.
WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert said in a statement, "Beyond her extraordinary accomplishments, Tina has represented the very best of the WNBA throughout her career... Her legacy will be defined not only by her excellence on the court, but by the standard she set as a leader, a teammate, and a champion for the communities she touched."
As Charles looks ahead, she wrote, "There are still dreams in my heart waiting to be lived, and I can’t wait to share that journey with you all." Fans and former teammates will be watching for her next chapter, as her influence on basketball and beyond is sure to continue.